Sunday, March 29, 2009

Reading Notes on "Clock without Hands"

Reading Notes: Carson McCullers, Clock without Hands
March 28-29, 2009

Though not a major participant in the action of the novel, the pharmacist J.T. Moran is the pivot point for "Clock without Hands." Diagnosed with leukemia, he is awakened to the world around him. But this awakening brings mostly loathing and resentment that he will be outlived by family, people in the streets, even trees. Moran resentful as well of his wife using money she has saved from packaging sandwiches and cakes to buy Coca-Cola stock -- sees it as a sign of economic independence that calls into question the necessity of his own life. His days are numbered, but he does not know the extent of the span still ahead of him: "what would happen in those months -- how long? -- that glared upon his numbered days. He was a man watching a clock without hands."

Moran is rapidly losing weight. His physical opposite is the "corpulent nor fat" 300 lb. judge, segregationist, and former congressman Fox Clain. Judge Clain, in his 80s, still shows the effects of a stroke 10 years earlier. Hearing from Moran of his fatal and incurable blood illness, the Judge authoritatively encourages him to simply eat a lot of liver.

The Judge's beloved son Johnny committed suicide years earlier after losing a case in his father's court in which he defended a black man accused of murder of a white man and rape of his wife. Judge Clain's family now reduced to Johnny's son, John Jester Clain, just now discovering his own "passions" -- flying, music, and racial justice.

Opposing the bitterness bloodlessness of Moran and the corpulence and decay of the Judge, Jester is full of life, light: "Jester Clain stood in the room with the sunlight from the street behind him. He was a slight, limber boy of seventeen with auburn hair and a complexion so fair that the freckles on his upturned nose were like cinnamon sprinked over cream. The glare brightened his red hair but his face was shadowed and he shielded his wine-dark eyes against the glare. He wore blue jeans and a striped jersey, the sleeves of which were pushed back to his delicate elbows." Jester ardently, romantically believes that all humans should be required to fly.

Jester's opposite is the blue-eyed "nigra" foundling Sherman Pew (Sherman being' of course, the ultimate charged name in Georgia), an inveterate liar, divided between a feckless black radicalism and a dandyish devotion to European high culture.

Jester begins to challenge his grandfather the Judge's segregationist rhetoric and to mock the old man's master plan to introduce legislation to redeem the value of Confederate money. Simultaneously, he develops a passion for Sherman Pew that is anything but requited. In imitation of Sherman's showy high cuture, Jester abandons boyish attire and begins to dress stylishlessly and practice classical piano. All of which infuriates Sherman, both his blue-eyed ambitions and his dark-skinned anger.

Ten years earlier, Sherman, then a boy and working as a golf caddy, had along with Jester saved the life of the Judge. when he collapsed with a seizure into a water trap -- the two thin boys dragging the massive old man out of the pond and onto the fairway. The Judge also knows the secret of Sherman's parentage: that he is the son of the black man Johnny Clain had tried to defend in his court and his lover, the white child bride he was accused of raping.

Johnny Clain's defense of Sherman's father had been a disaster because he had tried to make a constitutional argument before a jury made up of illiterate whites -- or, as the Judge calls them "twelve men good and true."

The Judge's behavior constantly undercuts his behavior, whether it be derived from great oratory of the past, Shakespeare, or diet books. There are also repeated references to similarity of Clain family and mules. Jester sees in amateurish painting (by the Judge's sister) of a plantation scene a cloud that looks like a pink mule. Moran notices in portrait of Judge's late beloved wife (by same artist) that her left foot looks like a tail. The Judge speaks of getting dental attention from a relative, a vetrinarian who speaks of the tenderness of mule mouths.

The Judge tries out inflammatory rhetoric on Jester -- "'How would you like to see a hulking Nigra boy sharing a [school] desk with a delicate little white girl?' The Judge could not believe in the possibility of this; he wanted to shock Jester to the gravity of the situation. His eyes challenged his grandson to react in the spirit of Southern gentlemen." Jester responds: "How about a hulking white girl sharing a desk with a delicate little Negro boy?"

Having challenged his grandfather's racial ideology, Jester (who is repulsed by the "gummy smeary" lipstick worn by most women and girls in the town) attacks his moral bombast. Uncomfortably seeing his attraction to Sherman reflected in the pages of the Kinsey report but triumphant in having just proved his normality in a whore house, Jester attacks the Judge for not having read the book and, indeed for having it banned from the Public Library. McCullers reveals that, in truth, Fox Clain had been an avid reader of Kinsey, hiding it behind the dust wrapper of "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire."

In the meantime, Moran undertakers a liver cure: "After his conversation with the Judge, he had filled the freezing compartment of the refridgerator with calf liver and beef liver. So morning after morning, while the electric light fought with the dawn, he fried a slice of the terrible liver. He had always loathed liver. . . . After it was cooked, smelling up the whole house like a stink bomb, Malone ate it, every loathesome bite. Just the fact that it was so losthsome comforted him a little. He swallowed even the gristly pieces that other people removed from their mouths and put on the sides of their plates."

Warned against "digging his grave with his teeth," the Judge's follows a different kind of diet. Unbelievably narcissistic, he becomes fascinated with his own bodily functions, gleefully reading his diet book, a recipe for "Lemon Crustless Pie," while defecating. "When the odor in the bathroom rose, he was not annoyed by this; on the contrary, since he was pleased by anything that belonged to him, and his feces were no exception, the smell rather soothed him."

Just as the corpulent Judge has a surfeit of ego and identity, so the withering Moran has a deficit. Moran sees his incorporeality expressed in the pages of a pop psychology book' "Sickness unto Death," he selects from the hospital book cart: "The greatest danger, that of losing one's own self, may pass off quietly as if it were nothing; every other loss, that of an arm, a leg, five dollars, a wide, etc., is sure to be noticed."

Disappointed by his beloved grandson's disapproval of his Old South rhetoric, the Judge engages the Europhilic Sherman as his amaneunsus and companion. But the more Sherman discovers of the racial prejudice underlying the corpulent old man's bombastic rhetoric, the more he sees he cannot stay in that role, however comfortable. In the Judge's papers, Sherman discovers the story of his birth, dashing his fantasy that he is the son of the opera singer Marian Anderson.

Sherman tries to fuse his black rage with his European aspirations, renting and furnishing in high-style a house in a rickety white neighborhood.

In response to Sherman's provocation, the Judge revives in miniature his former Klan chapter. Lots are drawn as to who will firebomb the offending "nigra." Moran's number comes up but, despite his lionization of the Judge, he refuses the duty, explaining that his impending death puts him in fear of his mortal soul."

Jester, who spies on the meeting. tries and fails to convince Sherman to flee. He then tries and fails to take revenge on Sherman's assasin.

Jester senses a kind of schizophrenia in the rages of both Sherman and his Grandfather, a gap between lofty desire and bigotry. He asks himself if his grandfather is "acting crisscrossed in his old age, laughing fit to kill when he ought to be crying?"Hearing of the Supreme Court decision on Brown vs. Board of Education, Judge Clain is so disoriented that he begins reciting the Gettysburg Address on the radio to the horror of the station's management -- a last crisis of the gap between rhetoric and reality.


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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Mauled and Devalued: "The Eustace Diamonds" Concludes

Anthony Trollope, The Eustace Diamonds: Reading Notes, Part X

A detective calls on Lizzie to tell her that her role in the disappearance of the diamonds is now known and will be revealed in open court, to which she is to be summoned as a witness (but not as a defendant). She is advised to make a clean breast of the entire story to Camperdown.

As her wedding to the egregious Sir Griffin approaches, Lucinda continues to make clear that if she is forced to the altar, the only possible outcome will be murder. Lucinda descends into madness; the marriage is called off; and Trollope (avoidant as always of extremity) hustles the bridegroom off to Japan and out of the story.

Lord Fawn uses the occasion of Lizzie's public testimony of her duplicity to finally break off the engagement. And Frank, who accompanies Lizzie to the courtroom, finds his own attraction to Lizzie waning. Frank reconciles with Lucy (who has, in the meantime, located the hitherto unknown soft heart of the Vulturess) and both of them exit the story (Frank's political career and finances no longer a narrative concern once Lizzie's spell is broken.

Lizzie retreats to Portray Castle, followed by yet another suitor -- the conniving preacher Mr. Emilius. Emilius would have had no chance at a match with someone of Lizzie's station and wealth, but her "devaluing" and "mauling" by the "fowlers" who have hunted her puts her within his reach. "She had been maimed fearfully in her late contests with the world, and was now lame and soiled and impotent." And of Emilius: "The boy with none of the equipments of the skilled sportsman can make himself master of a wounded bird. Mr. Emilius was seeking her inamoment of her weaknes, fearing that all chance os succes might be over for him should she ever again recover the full use of her wings."

Antisemitic undercurrents. The rumors that Emilius is a Jew allows Trollope to reinforce a racial line he had already drawn by having her deal with the crooked, and also Jewish, jeweler Mr. Benjamin.

The story concludes with the gossiping Lords and Ladies at the Palliser retreat at matching Priory -- reminiscent of the Gods on Olympus looking down on the lives of the Greek mortals. Trollope, however, has spoken of a world where heroes and heroines, absolute good and absolute evil no longer exist.

The moral order in "The Eustace Diamonds" is one where men and women are bound by their own fate and status. Marriage in "The Eustace Diamonds" is like a species barrier, where wealth should marry wealth, those of modest means (Frank and Lucy) flock together, and even liars wed liars (Lizzie and Emilius).


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Sunday, March 22, 2009

Lizzie's Suitors

Anthony Trollope, The Eustace Diamonds: Reading Notes, Part IX

The putative "corsair" Lord George de Bruce Carruthers, the only one of Lizzie's suitors who knows her role in the thefts, considers whether he should force her into marrying him. "He had been careful to reduce her to a condition of despair, that she would have undoubtedly have accepted him . . ." but "she was such a mass of deceit, that he was afraid of her."

He makes his decision: "in spite of her beauty, his judgement went against her. He did not dare to share even his boat with such a dangerous fellow-passenger."

Lizzie begins maneuvering to cut the last bond between Lucy and Frank.

Without even knowing of Lizzie's complicity in the theft of the diamonds, Frank knows her to be false: "she was affected, unreal,-- and, in fact a liar in every word and look and motion." Yet "he loved her after a fashion and was prone to sit near her, and was fool enough to be flattered by her caresses."

Lizzie knows the truth of her value vis-a-vis Lucy. "Lucy could hold her ground because she was real. You may knock about a diamond and not even scratch it; whereas paste in rough usage betrays itself. Lizzie, with all her self-assuring protestations, knew that she was paste, and knew that Lucy was real stone."

Lucinda Roanoke tries everything she can to shake her irascible suitor Sir Griffin Trewitt: "he knows that I detest him, and tee he goes on with it. I have told him a score of times, but nothing will make him give it up. It is not that he loves me, but he thinks that that will be his triumph." With a "ghastly smile," she suggests to Lizzie that the only hope is that either she or Sir Griffin murders the other.

The Eustace family, including Camperdown, begins to exert pressure on Lord Fawn to honor his commitment to Lizzie, concluding "it would be a good thing to get the widow married and placed under some decent control."

Fawn writes Lizzie a letter expressing his dislike for the idea of marrying her but says he will honor his vow if she so demands.


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Diamonds and Farthings

Anthony Trollope, The Eustace Diamonds: Reading Notes, Part VIII

Diamonds truly stolen in robbery at Mrs. Carbuncle's residence, in which Lizzie's maid Patience Crabstick is implicated.

Woven with story of diamonds is droll account of Plantagenet Palliser's titanic struggle to pass a bill in Parliament for the five farthing penny -- to move British coinage to a decimal system.

Glencora takes Lizzie's part and helps engineer social pressure on Lord Fawn to make good his commitment.

Wisdom from the thief Billie Cann: "pleasures should never be made necessities."

Billy Cann opines to Detective Gager on the police profession: "You guess. You're always a-guessing. And because you know how to guess, they pays you for guessing. But guessing ain't knowing."

The highly practical (and vulgar) Mrs. Hittaway explains to her mother Lady Fawn that her beliefs in virtue, constancy, and honesty are "antedeluvian."

Mrs. Hittaway arranges for the groundskeeper at Portray Castle to testify to Lord Fawn of Lizzie's indiscretions with Frank. But Fawn cannot bear to ask the questions required to extract the story. "He was weak and foolish and, in many respects, ignorant, -- but he was a gentleman.

Deserted by Frank, the "good as gold" Lucy looks in the mirror to view her plain clothes and admits she has been "utterly ignorant of her own value." Lucy realizes her love for Frank has been a "luxury."

Lizzie's great skills as an actress: " In the ordinary scenes of ordinary life she could not acquit herself well. There was no reality about her, and the want of it was strangely plain to most unobservant eyes. But give her a part to play that required exaggerated strong action, and she hardly ever failed."

In her confrontation with Fawn, Lizzie boldly invokes the interest in her case of the Duke of Omnium. Fawn reflects on this: "he knew that the Duke of Omnium was a worn-out old debauchee, with one foot in the grave, who was looked after by two or three women who were only anxious that he should not disgrace himself by some absurdity before he dies. Nevertheless, the Duke of Omnium, or the Duke's name, was a power in the nation."

Ironically, the loss of the diamonds has been a boon to Lizzie's fortunes and status. Learning that Patience Crabstick has been apprehended, Lizzie again worries that her duplicity will be revealed.
Frank confesses his insolvency to the sympathetic Mrs. Carbuncle: "the fact is I live in that detestable no-man's land between respectability and insolvency, which has none of the pleasures of either . . . I have all the recklessness, but none of the carelessness, of the hopelessly insolvent man."

Lizzie contemplates the renewal of her engagement to Lord Fawn with an incredulous Frank: "A woman can marry without consulting her heart. Women do so every day. The man is a Lord, and has a position."

Frank defends Lucy to Lizzie as "perfect." To which Lizzie responds acidly "can you marry this perfection without a sixpence?"



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Saturday, March 21, 2009

Lizzieites and Anti-Lizzieites

Anthony Trollope, The Eustace Diamonds: Reading Notes, Part VII

The iron box for the diamonds stolen by professional thieves at a railway inn while Lizzie sleeps. In reality, the diamonds are safe beneath Lizzie's pillow, but she instinctively allows the police to believe the theft was successful.

Lizzie maintains her falsehood with Frank, whom she enlists in advising her how to deal with the "theft."

Neglected by her putative betrothed, Lucy Morris is outwardly confident but "there grew at her heart a little weed of care, which from week to week spread its noxious, heavy-scented leaves, and robbed her of her joyousness."

Lucy's dreary life with the Vultureress has few duties. Lady Linlithgow "simply chose to have some one sitting with her to whom she could speak and make little cross-grained, sarcastic, and ill-natured remarks."

Society divides into "Lizzieites and Anti-Lizzieites," with the Conservatives, led by Frank Greystock, holding Lizzie as an innocent victim and mistreated and the Liberals defending Lord Fawn and finding much to suspect in the robbery.

At a gathering of the Pallisers and their circle at Matching Priory -- including the Grey's of "Can You Forgive Her?" and the Chilterns and Madame Goesler of "Phineas Finn" -- all the latest rumors of the Eustace Diamonds' fate arrive by telegraph. Uncomfortably for him, Lord Fawn is among the guests. The aged, increasingly childlike Duke of Omnium obsessed with the scandal.

Glencora archly proclaims she is "quite envious" of "that little purring cat, Lady Eustace, having been so very--very clever" finding

It "delightful to think that a woman has stolen her own property and put all the police into a state of ferment."


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Lucinda Roanoke, the reluctant fortune hunter

Anthony Trollope, The Eustace Diamonds: Reading Notes, Part VI

Lizzie's houseguests are almost entirely comprised of fortune hunters, including the adventuress Mrs. Carbuncle, her ally Lord George de Bruce Carruthers, and her icy neice Miss Lucinda Roanoke.

Odd courtship of the impatient Sir Griffin Tewitt and Lucinda. On his second proposal, when she inquires if he is quite sure of his intentions, he sputters "I'm not a man who does things without thinking; and when I've thought, I don't want to think again."

Having accepted Sir Griffin, the reluctant fortune huntress Lucinda remarks to her aunt "I hate a good many people; but of all the people in the world I hate Sir Griffin Tewitt the worst. . . . I shall have to lie to him, -- but there shall be no lying to you, however you may wish it."

Mrs. Carbuncle on marital realities: "not that girls ever really care about men now. They've got to be married, and they make the best of it."

Lucinda accepts a kiss from Sir Griffin, though "she would sooner have leaped at the blackest, darkest, dirtiest river in the county."

And then, when Lucinda is by herself: "She burst into tears. Never before had she been this polluted. The embrace had disgusted her. And if this, the beginning of it, were so bad, how was she to drink the cup to the bitter dregs?"



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Friday, March 20, 2009

An interrogation by the Vulturess

Anthony Trollope, The Eustace Diamonds: Reading Notes, Part V

Trollope on the expense of rising in society: "let nobody dream that he can be somebody without having to pay for that honor."

Lady Linlithgow's welcome to Lucy is a chilly one. Under questioning, Lucy describes her mirthful life among Lady Fawn and her daughters, to which the Vultureress responds: "you won't find anything to laugh at here; at least, I don't. If you want to laugh, you can laugh upstairs."

Though Lucy hopes to keep private the identity of her betrothed, Lady Linlithgow performs a remarkable crossexamination, not only extracting that information but adding to it a merciless -- and quite accurate -- assessment of the motivations at play.

Addressing his readers, Trollope defends his writing of a book with an unheroic hero such as Frank Greystock. "With whom are we to sympathize? says the reader . . . Oh my reader, when you have called the dearest of your friends round you to your hospitable table, how many heroes are there sitting at the board? . . . We cannot have heroes to dine with us. There are none. But neither are our friends villians, -- whose every aspiration is for evil."

Trollope severely disapproves of the then fashionable ponytail as "a dorsal excresence."

Tempted by Lizzie's rank, wealth, and beauty, Frank continues to postpone answering the love letters from his betrothed. "A man does not write a love letter easily when he is in doubt himself whether he does or does not mean to be a scoundrel."

Lizzie's son, the heir, makes a brief appearance -- though he is not described nor does he speak -- in order to be flaunted at the childless John Eustace (much as the diamonds were flaunted before Frank Greylock). The appearance made "the boy was done and carried away. Lizzie had played that card and had turned her trick."


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The "good as gold" Lucy Morris

Anthony Trollope, The Eustace Diamonds: Reading Notes, Part IV

Frank's seduction by Lizzie continues. Lizzie playfully -- but pointedly -- belittles her rival Lucy: "she is tame and quiet,-- a cat that will sleep on the rug before the fire, and you think she will never scratch."

Lucy continually spoken of as being "as good as gold," but that kind of intrinsic value has little worth in exchange, as her economic status makes her unworthy in people's eyes of marriage to a rising young man such as Frank Greystock and also unworthy to voice her opinions to those above her station, as in her contretemps with the status-obsessed Lord Fawn.

Phrase from a Tennyson poem summarizes, in phony Scots dialect, the "proper" way to pursue a mercenary marriage: "Doan't thou marry for munny, but goa where munny is."

Frank's mother hopes to derail her son's marriage to Lucy, who she blames for allowing herself to be loved: "Lucy had behaved badly in allowing herself to be loved by a man who ought to have loved money."

Frank's mother acknowledges to herself that their wealthy cousin is not "good as gold" the way Lucy is, but excuses her: "Of course, Lizzie Eustace was not just all that she should be; -- but then who is?"

Frank's mother sees signs that her son is willing to abandon his "very imprudent match" and reflects: "there was no doubt about Lucy being as good as gold; -- only that real gold, vile as it was, was the one thing Frank so much needed."

Wordlessly acceding to his mother's maneuver to delay formalizing his commitment to Lucy, Frank sends his "beloved" to live as unpaid companion to the vulturess Lady Lithlingow.

Frank returns to Lizzie at Portray Castle. Seeing a ring he was given by Lucy on his hand, she unlocks and flaunts the famous diamonds at him.

Frank: "I am so poor a man that this string of stones, which you throw about the room like a child's toy, would be the making of me."

Lucy: "Take it and be made."

Frank advises Lizzie to release Lord Fawn from his commitment. But Lizzie is revenge minded: "men have become so soft themselves, that they no longer think even of punishing those who behave badly, and they expect women to be softer and more faineant than themselves."

Lizzie, who dreams of being swept up by a Byronic corsair, on Fawn: "Is he not a poor social stick; -- a bit of half-dead wood, good to make a post of, if one wants a post?" While certainly livlier than Fawn, one could hardly consider Frank byronic.

Lizzie renews her sarcastic attack on Frank's betrothed, "that prim morsel of feminine propriety who has been clever enough to make you believe that her morality would suffice to make you happy."

Lizzie enacts a passionate declaration of love to the befuddled Frank, who is entranced by her even as he also recalls that her wealth would be useful.



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Sunday, March 15, 2009

"Like a beautiful animal you are afraid to caress for fear it should bite"

Anthony Trollope, The Eustace Diamonds: Reading Notes, Part III

Fawn consults with Camperdown, whose word he takes as "gospel," and becomes even more disquieted: Fawn "could not unravel truth quickly, but he could grasp it when it came to him. She was certainly greedy, false, and dishonest . . . Nevertheless he was engaged to marry her!"

Adding to his misery, Fawn's married sister, Mrs. Hittaway, briefs her slow-witted brother on Lizzie's status as the greatest vixen in London.

Uneasyness of Lizzie's visit to her prospective relations: "The Fawn ladies were not good hypocrites . . . and there was a general conviction in the dovecote that an evil thing had fallen upon them."

Lucy Morris confides to Frank her sense of the kind of beauty her childhood friend has become: "she looks like a beautiful animal that you are afraid to careess for fear it should bite you; -- an animal that would be beautiful if its eyes were not so restless, and its teeth so sharp and white."

John Eustace tells Frank of his sense of what Lizzie's marriage to Fawn will bring: "Fawn will be always afraid of her, -- and won't be in the least afraid of us. We shall have to fight him, and he won't fight her."

Frank Greystock debates within himself between marrying for passion -- his love of Lucy -- and marrying for ambition. [The same decision faced by Phineas Finn when he rejects the wealthy Mdm. Gensler]

Lizzie's constitutional falseness: "True love, true friendship, true benevolence, true tenderness, were beautiful to her, -- qualities on which she could descant almost with eloquence; and therefore she was always shamming love and friendship and benevolence and tenderness. She could tell you, with words most appropriate to the subject, how horrible were all shams, and in saying so would not be altogether insincere; -- yet she knew that she herself was ever shamming, and she satisfied herself with shams."

Fawn presents an ultimatum to Lizzie that she either give up the diamonds or he will break-off their marriage. Lizzie spurns both variables, determined to hold Fawn to his promise and, of course, keep the necklace. "She walked on full of fierce courage, -- despising him, but determined that she would marry him." Fawn returns to London, leaving negotiations in his mother's hands.

Fawn lost in perplexity. Trollope speaks of "the short, straight grooves of Lord Fawn's intellect."

Lizzie begins to wear the diamonds regularly in public. At one such fete, Glencora Palliser and her friend Mdm. Max Gensler debate the prospects of the pending marriage of Fawn and Lizzie.

Frank and Lucy are engaged, but he still finds himself torn -- visaulizing the domestic bliss of his marriage to the governess but drawn to his glamorous, wealthy, and dangerous cousin Lizzie.

One of the peculiarities of "The Eustace Diamonds" that Lizzie's son by the late Sir Florian, though fairly often referred to, is never seen -- at least through the first 200 pages. On her railway trip to Scotland and her home at Portray Castle, the iron case bearing the necklace is at center stage, but the heir is never glimpsed.



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Legal dueling and matrimonial speculation

Anthony Trollope, The Eustace Diamonds: Reading Notes, Part II

The duel begins between the Eustace family lawyer, Mr. Camperdown, and Lizzie over the possession of the diamond necklace, with Lizzie advised by her not entirely scrupulous attorneys Messrs. Mobray and Mopus.

Definition: appaneges = dependent possessions

Camperdown incensed at Lizzie's willful retention of the necklace: "£10,000 my dear John! And she is to be allowed to filch it as other widows filch china cups and a silver teaspoon or two!"

In her face-off with Camperdown, Lizzie desperately wishes sage advice, but hesitates as all those from whom she would seek it would be likely to advise her to return the diamonds -- which, of course, she is determined not to do.

The "vulturess" Lady Linlithgow comes to Lizzie on an embassy from Camperdown. Though old, she has great resilience: "she was one of those old women . . . on whom old age appears to have no debilitating effects. If the hand of Lady Lithlingow ever trembled, it trembled from anger; -- if her foot ever faltered, it faltered for effect. . . . She was as hard as an oak post, -- but then she was also as reliable."

Of Lucy's charitable but domineering employer Lady Fawn (who has forbidden her to receive visits by Frank Greylock): "Lady Fawn was a tower of strength to Lucy. But then a tower of strength may at any moment become a dungeon."

Lizzie, desperate for support, accepts Lord Fawn's proposal of marriage. Fawn, meanwhile, is in straightened circumstances and has his eyes fixed on Lizzie's income.

His proposal very much an act of "matrimonial speculation," Lord Fawn has investigated Lizzie's finances -- and appreciates her beauty -- but has no idea of her character whatsoever. "For aught he knew, she might be afflicted by every vice to which a woman can be subject. In truth, she was afflicted by so many, that the addition of all the others could hardly have made her worse than she was."

In their marital negotiations, Fawn is slow but practical and Lizzie "quick as a lizard" but ill-informed. Lizzie is shocked to hear that Fawn's lawyer is Mr. Camperdown; Fawn equally disquieted to learn that the Eustace family is threatening legal action for recovery of the diamond necklace.

To lock the discomfited Lord Fawn into the marriage, Lizzie quickly broadcasts news of the engagement throughout society.





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Saturday, March 14, 2009

The jewel-bedecked girl: "The Eustace Diamonds" begins

Anthony Trollope, The Eustace Diamonds: Reading Notes, Part I

Trollope introduces Lizzie Greylock -- who will become Lady Eustace -- as a girl who, though her father has no particular fortune "went about everywhere with jewels on her fingers, and red gems hanging around her neck, and yellow gems pendent from her ears, and white gems shining in her black hair."

Her father's interests to his very deathbed are limited to "whist, wine, and wickedness in general." On his death, Lizzie goes to live with her horrid aunt Lady Linlithgow, who she calls, with good reason, "the old vulturess."

Lizzie cuts a deal with her father's debtors to retain her jewels until she can finalize her match with the wealthy Sir Florian Eustace.

One additional apparent appeal of Sir Florian for Lizzie is that he is dying. Sir Florian combines selfless nobility and thoughtless vice: "he was one who denied himself no pleasure, let the cost be what it might in health, pocket, or morals."

"Blear-eyed in his ways around town," Sir Florian mistakes the calculating Lizzie for the "the purest, the truest, and the noblest" of women.

Lizzie: "As she was utterly devoid of true tenderness, so she was also devoid of conscience."

Lizzie engineers her marriage to Sir Florian quickly, and he dies of his lingering infirmity less than a year later. "She had so far played her game well, and had won her stakes."

Lizzie's reptilian allure: "her figure was lithe and soft and slim and slender . .. She was almost snake-like in her rapid bendings and the almost too easy gestures of her body."

Lizzie's eyes: "blue and clear, bright as cerulian waters. They were long, large eyes -- but very dangerous. To those who knew how to read a face, there was danger plainly written in them. Poor Sir Florian had not known."

After Sir Florian's death, Lizzie gives birth to an heir and, of seemingly just as much concern to the family, makes claim to a family heirloom -- a massive diamond necklace valued at £10,000.

Lizzie's childhood friend, the governess Lucy Morris, is her opposite in both temperment and approach to life. Straightforward and accepting of her status -- she envies no one. Yet "to herself, no one was her superior." However admirable, she is, Trollope informs us, not a heroine.

The Tory temperment to see all change, even that which benefits them, as ill and feel "well-assured that all good things are gradually being brought to an end by the voice of the people."

Lizzie's cousin -- and Lucy's beloved -- Frank Graystock is a Tory M.P. not from ideology but from opportunity.

Lizzie's brother-in-law, John Eustace, hopes to induce Frank to marry his brother's troublesome widow -- "she is making herself queer . . . she doesn't know know what she ought to be at, and what she ought not. You could tell her."


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